'Occupy' movement comes to church

CHARLOTTE, N.C. (ABP) – As the Occupy protest movement spreads into
cities across the United States and around the world, one North Carolina
Baptist congregation says it is time to occupy the church.

A sign in front of the church urges passersby on heavily traveled Park
Road to “Occupy Church! Give Sundays their due!" On Nov. 18 church
members camped on the church lawn in a whimsical “protest” message to
the congregation and community that church is important.

Russ Dean, co-pastor of Park Road Baptist Church in Charlotte, N.C.,
said he got the idea for “Occupy Church” one day while driving to work
after reading the morning news.

While Park Road has a reputation as a progressive church -– it is one of
the few Baptist churches in the South to have a woman co-pastor (Amy
Jacks Dean) -– Russ Dean said their Occupy isn’t part of the protest
movement but rather a successful challenge to church members at a time
when attendance was lagging and offerings were falling behind.

The message
to the community was intended as “a conversation starter,” he said,
and a reminder that Park Road Baptist Church is open to anyone,
according to its website, “regardless of race, sexual orientation,
socio-economic status, or theological belief.”

Dean said the Occupy Church slogan hasn’t prompted much conversation within the church about aims of the Occupy Wall Street -– and other cities -– resistance movement against corporate greed and corruption, but that might happen in the future.

Christians are divided in their support of the movement, which uses
civil-disobedience tactics borrowed from the revolutionary Arab Spring.

Archbishop of Canterbury Rowan Williams said he believes Jesus would be
alongside protestors being arrested for refusing eviction from
encampments on public grounds.

“The Jesus we meet in the Bible is somebody who constantly asks awkward
questions -- especially questions addressed to religious people, moral
people and rich people,” the leader of 78 million Anglicans worldwide wrote for the Christmas issue of Radio Times.

“What would Jesus do?” Williams asked. “He’d first of all be there:
sharing the risks, not just taking sides but steadily changing the
entire atmosphere by the questions he asks of everybody involved, rich
and poor, capitalist and protester and cleric.”

Tony Perkins, meanwhile, head of the conservative Family Research
Council, said in a CNN blog that Jesus was “a free marketer, not an
Occupier.”

“Jesus rejected collectivism and the mentality that has occupied America
for the last few decades: that everyone gets a trophy -- equal outcomes
for inequitable performance,” Perkins said. “There are winners and yes,
there are losers. And wins and losses are determined by the diligence
and determination of the individual.”

“Some would argue that such an approach encourages abuses, the likes of which we have seen on Wall Street,” Perkins said. “While some egregious abuses have taken place, they are not inevitable or intrinsic to free enterprise.”

Baptist minister Jesse Jackson has compared the Occupy protests to the
Civil Rights Movement of the 1960s, in which he served alongside Martin
Luther King. Jackson showed up Dec. 1 to encourage a fledgling Occupy
Phoenix protest, the day before five people were treated for pepper
spray injuries suffered while handing out Occupy literature at a popular
art walk in downtown Phoenix.